So,
here are the facts.
Undeterred,
the dreadlocked gunman sought to finish his task. Standing over Faulkner, the
assassin peered into the eyes of a man who was twenty-five and recently
married; of a policeman whose performance record contained zero disciplinary
actions and numerous commendations; of a determined dreamer who hoped
to rise to the position of police commissioner or to attain a law degree and
work in the District Attorney’s Office; of a fellow human being who aspired to
become a father in the not-so-distant future.[2]
The gunman pulled the trigger, firing the fatal bullet. Officer Faulkner laid
dead on the street, executed for the crime of performing his duty.
The
murderer attempted to flee, but only managed to make it to the curb. Police officers
arrived on the scene quickly and apprehended the suspect. His name was Mumia
Abu-Jamal, formerly known as Wesley Cook. By a stroke of coincidence, Abu-Jamal’s
brother happened to be William Cook, the driver who had been involved in the
initial confrontation with Officer Faulkner.
The testimony of four witnesses assisted in the reconstruction of the incident. A fifth eyewitness, the aforementioned William Cook, asserted on the scene that he was not involved in the murder. At the trial of his brother, William refused to testify, citing his Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination.
The testimony of four witnesses assisted in the reconstruction of the incident. A fifth eyewitness, the aforementioned William Cook, asserted on the scene that he was not involved in the murder. At the trial of his brother, William refused to testify, citing his Fifth Amendment protection against self-incrimination.
The
murder weapon, a .38-caliber Charter Arms, was registered to Abu-Jamal. The
bullet removed from Abu-Jamal’s body was traced back to Officer Faulkner’s
service weapon. Both guns were discovered and retrieved at the scene of the
crime.
After
being transported to the hospital to treat his gunshot wound, Abu-Jamal
allegedly stated: “I shot the motherfucker and I hope the motherfucker dies.”[3]
The confession was overheard and recorded by Priscilla Durham, a security guard
who worked at the hospital.
These
are the facts, and they are indeed stubborn things.
Nevertheless, these truths have
been submerged in a sea of obfuscation as the events of 9 December 1981 recede
into the abyss of the past. Floating along in this body of water is Mumia
Abu-Jamal, who has emerged as the vessel that represents all that is wrong with
the American system of justice for both his advocates and his opponents. Over the
course of thirty-two years, Mr. Abu-Jamal and his supporters have transformed
the case from a local homicide of a police officer into an international
referendum on the persistence of racism in American jurisprudence. They have
wielded America’s history of racial intolerance as a rhetorical shield to fend
off the compelling proof of Abu-Jamal’s culpability. They have encouraged
others to view the case with an historical telescope rather than a microscope,
which has engendered a form of myopia in which broad historical context
supersedes even the most basic knowledge of the crime.
Abu-Jamal’s legal team has
marshaled an impressive stable of wealthy celebrities and influential
academics to support his cause. These patrons have afforded Abu-Jamal the
credibility and, more importantly, the finances to construct a platform upon
which he can rail against the perceived shortcomings of America’s justice
system, whose protections have enabled Abu-Jamal to make his case for innocence
in appellate proceedings for three decades, to no avail; whose caution led to
the overturning of Abu-Jamal’s death sentence on the grounds that jurors might have been confused about the
instructions that they received before commencing deliberations during the
penalty phase of the trial; and whose restrictions have not silenced
Abu-Jamal’s voice during his incarceration. In short, Mumia Abu Jamal’s “persecution”
is mythic and risible.
Moreover,
the transcript is littered with instances when Mumia insulted Judge Sabo and
repeatedly revisited issues on which Sabo had already ruled, ranting like a petulant
child when he did not get his way. The defendant did not seem to care that his
disrespectful behavior toward the judge might have reflected a general
disregard for officers of the law and the law itself, which likely influenced
the jury. In the end, if Abu-Jamal’s sympathizers would like to proclaim that Mr.
Abu-Jamal's trial was a circus, they would be remiss if they did not include
the identity of the ringmaster when formulating their argument.
In
spite of the myriad petitions that Abu-Jamal’s defense team has offered in
court, no new trial is forthcoming. The exculpatory conspiracy theories, which
have relied on the testimonies and recollections of petty criminals and serial
prevaricators, have only exposed the desperation to which Abu-Jamal’s lawyers
will resort to free their client from his rightful sentence. With his appeals
finally exhausted, Mumia Abu-Jamal will spend the rest of his life behind bars.
Undoubtedly,
there will remain individuals unconvinced of Mumia’s guilt who will regard the
prisoner as a martyr to American racism. They will point to our
nation’s past as proof of a present injustice. Mumia Abu-Jamal’s supporters would
be well-advised, nonetheless, to keep in mind that the light of history can blind
just as easily as it can illuminate. Otherwise, they will continue to fall for
the cynical sleight-of-hand that Abu-Jamal has employed to conceal the
truth, which has been determined by a jury and reaffirmed after numerous appellate
proceedings: Mumia Abu-Jamal murdered Daniel Faulkner on December 9, 1981. Case
closed.
-30-
[1] http://www.quotationspage.com/quote/3235.html
[2] This
general sketch of Officer Faulkner was gleaned from the following book:
Faulkner, Maureen and Smerconish, Michael, Murdered
by Mumia (Guilford, CT: Lyons Press, 2008).
[3]
Marc Kaufman, “Abu-Jamal Said He Shot Officer, Two Tell Trial,” Philadelphia Inquirer, June 15, 1982.
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